The history of the British Army spans three and a half centuries and numerous European, colonial and world wars. From the early 1800s until 1914, the United Kingdom was the greatest economic and imperial power in the world, and although this dominance was principally achieved through the strength of the British Royal Navy, the British Army played a significant role.
In peacetime, Britain has generally maintained only a small professional volunteer army, expanding this as required in time of war, due to Britain's traditional role as a sea power. Since 1745, the army has played little or no role in British domestic politics, and, other than in Ireland, has seldom been deployed against internal threats.
The Army has been involved in many international conflicts, including the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War and the two World Wars. Historically, it contributed to the expansion and retention of the British Empire. Whilst in the latter part of the 20th century, it oversaw a generally orderly dismantling of that empire. The 1990s saw the Army become increasing involved in multi-national peacekeeping work and this has continued into the 21st century. Recently, it has also been deployed in combat operations in Iraq.
The British Army has long been at the forefront of new military developments. It was the first to develop and deploy the tank, and what is now the Royal Air Force had its origins within the British army.
Prior to the English Civil War in 1642, there was no standing army in England or Scotland. Troops were raised in either country by its King, when required, a development of the feudal concept of fief (in which a lord was obligated to raise a certain quota of knights, men at arms and yeomanry, under greater control of the King). After the English Tudor queen, Elizabeth I, died childless, the Scottish Stewart, King James VI, found himself also King James I of England, and moved to London. His heir, Charles I, found himself embroiled in war over his attempt to rule England without a parliament. This led to various Royalist and Parliamentary armies being raised to battle for the control of England in the English Civil War. With its victory in that war, the English Parliament assumed control, and standing companies, based on Cromwell's New Model Army, formed the basis of the first regiments of the new standing English Army. Cromwell had deprived both England and Scotland of a monarch when he had Charles I beheaded. When the still independent Scotland proclaimed his son , also named Charles Stewart, King of Scotland on 4th February, 1649, Cromwell invaded the country in an attempt to depose the uncrowned King and to force his own protectorship upon Scotland (Edinburgh Castle surrendered to the English on Christmas Eve, 1650, but Charles II was crowned at Scone on New Year's Day). This invasion resulted in many Scottish Prisoners-Of-War being shipped as slaves to English colonies. Following Cromwell's death, the Restoration of Charles II saw the New Model Army kept as a standing force, and the King raised further regiments loyal to the Crown. On January 26th, 1661 Charles II issued the Royal Warrant that created the genesis of what would become the British Army, although the Scottish and English Armies would remain two separate organisations until the unification of England and Scotland in 1707.
In an effort to control the powers of the monarch, the English Parliament had passed the Bill of Rights 1689 to prevent a standing army in peacetime without the consent of Parliament. To this day, annual continuation notices are required for the British Army to remain legal. However, now the Army was under the control of the Government, and the last King to lead his troops into battle was George II at the Battle of Dettingen in 1743.
Units had originally been known by the names of their colonels, such as Sir John Mordaunt's Regiment of Foot, but in 1751 a numeral system was adopted, with each regiment gaining a number in accordance with their rank in the order of precedence, so John Mordaunt's Regiment became the 47th Regiment of Foot. During the period of 1661-1774, the British Empire expanded during the many wars it took part in against its European rivals and the Army actively participated in all the conflicts, including the Seven Years' War (1755-63), deemed to be one of the first 'world wars', and saw one of the most important conquests by the Army; the taking of Quebec.
The result of this war, the North American chapter of which was known locally as the French and Indian War and lasted nine years, was to leave Britain as the dominant imperial power on the continent, and the only European power east of the Mississippi (although it would return southern Florida to Spain). Britain and France had both relied extensively on native allies in war and peace, throughout their contest for North America. With the defeat of France, the British government no longer sought actively to curry the favour of native nations, and a wave of British settlers was unleashed by the war, crashing west across the Appalachians. This pressure on native lands eventually led to Pontiac's War, a bitter campaign that inflamed the borders of the American colonies. Although the British Army ultimately was victorious, the British Governments response to the war was to mollify the native nations by demarcing the Appalachians as the westward limit for European settlement. This enraged both wealthy citizens of the colonies, like George Washington, engaged in land speculation (enriching themselves by selling native land), and the poor, who were bent on pushing westward to claim native land as their prize in the war with France. The British government's belated attempts to protect native Americans was one of several factors that led the thirteen American colonies to launch the secessionist American War of Independence.
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In 1803, with Napoleon as leader of France, the Napoleonic Wars began. As in the previous war with France, the Army saw service in many campaigns, including the capture of the Cape of Good Hope in Southern Africa; an abortive (initially unauthorised) invasion of Spanish-South America along with further wars and campaigns in the Indian sub-continent and Caribbean. The Army also saw service in the War of 1812 against America (not directly related to the Napoleonic Wars, but brought about largely by the conflict's disruption of American trade) though it was initially Canadian forces that fought the Americans back into the USA after their invasion of Canada failed.
The most important campaign the Army fought during the conflict was the Peninsular War in Portugal and Spain. After the French had invaded Portugal and Spain, the British landed in Portugal to help them in their uprising against the French in 1808. The British were commanded by Lieutenant-General Arthur Wellesley (later 1st Duke of Wellington) and he achieved a number of important victories over the French but was, in spite of this, replaced as commander. After Sir John Moore was killed at the Battle of Corunna in January 1809, Wellesley returned as Commander-in-Chief. With the help of the Portuguese and Spanish (including guerrillas), the British fought many bloody battles against the French who had invaded Portugal twice, being pushed out both times, and the British also having to retreat from Spain a number of times until, in May 1813, a renewed offensive saw the French pushed back in Spain, and the British successfully entered France itself in October 1813. With the British now firmly in France and the French experiencing defeats elsewhere, Napoleon was forced into exile in April 1814. He returned to France and regained power but was defeated at Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815 by a British, Belgian, Dutch, and Prussian force under the command of the Duke of Wellington.
Due to the war, the British Empire had increased in size and was continuing to do so after the end of the war. The Government, however, implemented heavy cuts on the Armed Forces, with many units being disbanded, including the émigre units that had fled to Britain from countries occupied by France such as the King's German Legion and Royal Corsican Rangers. The cuts proved too severe and a number of new regiments were raised. Though the Royal Navy played an extremely prominent part in the expansion and maintenance of the Empire, the Army's contribution was vital. One of the most important contributions was its participation in the many wars during the expansion of British power in the Indian sub-continent, eventually culminating in the establishment of most what is modern-day India by the 1850s. The Army also saw increasing service in Africa and in the Far East, including the First China War between 1839-42, a war ostensibly provoked for trade reason.
At the peak of the British Empire, the middle and upper classes were often 'militaristic', usually seeking to join the armed forces to increase their social standing, especially the Yeomanry regiments. In 1859, there was an assassination attempt on Napoleon III, ruler of France, by Felice Orsini which was linked to Britain. In spite of the fact Britain had only just been in a war against Russia with France as its ally, there was now an increased fear of war breaking out. This saw a surge in interest in the more affluent communities in creating volunteer units, known as 'Volunteer Rifle Corps'. There were many such corps formed all over the United Kingdom, one of the most prominent was the Artists' Rifles (originally known as the 38th Middlesex Rifle Volunteer Corps) established in 1860 by the art student Edward Starling.
In the early 1870s, the Cardwell reforms, named after the Secretary of State of War Edward Cardwell, saw radical reforms of the armed forces implemented in the aftermath of the inadequacies found in the Crimean War. Some of the reforms included the abolition of the purchase of commissions, replacing it with advancement by seniority and merit; the end of flogging and the pairing of single-battalion regiments via administrative depots on a county-based system. The Childers reforms, which came into effect on 1 July 1881, continued the reforms which strengthened regiments' county affiliations by discarding the numeral system and combining most of the single-battalion regiments into two-battalion regiments with, for the most part, county names in their titles. This created a force of 69 Line Infantry regiments, consisting of 48 English, 10 Scottish, 8 Irish, and 3 Welsh regiments. Another aspect of the reforms included the further integration of the militia into the regular regimental system, becoming additional numbered battalions of the regiments, and the establishment of a reserve force. These changes, and the others that were implemented, bore the Army in good stead for the two World Wars it would experience in the 20th Century.
For a list of the regiments that were established on 1 July, see List of British Army regiments (1881).
The Second Boer War (1899-1902) provided further impetus for the expansion of the Army -- which had already been expanding in size during the last years of the 19th Century -- including the creation of the Irish Guards in 1900 in honour of the distinguished service of Irish regiments during that conflict, and the Royal Garrison Regiment, created to fill the void of units departing for South Africa. After the end of the war and the Army's inadequacies during it, further reforms took place, known as the Haldane reforms after Richard Burdon Haldane. Some of the reforms included the establishment of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in anticipation of a war on the European continent; and a part-time volunteer organisation, known as the Territorial Force, was also created, encompassing the reserve units of the Army with militia units being transferred to the newly created Special Reserve. An Air Battalion was formed in the Royal Engineers in 1911, becoming the Royal Flying Corps the following year. The RFC remained part of the Army until 1918 when it was separated to form the Royal Air Force.
After this, the Army increasingly concentrated on policing the Empire in its many distant outposts while also helping to expand it. The Army was used to intervene in other nations, mostly for British interests such as trade. In Canada, Irish-American ex-Union Army soldiers launched a number of encroachments into Canadian territory in 1866 and 1870, known as the Fenian Raids. These actions saw an increasing assertiveness in Canada, with Canadian units being the primary defenders. In 1878, the Second Afghan War took place between 1878-80 due to fears of Russian influence in Afghanistan, Russia being Britain's rival in the region. Elsewhere, in Africa, the Anglo-Zulu War began, in 1879, signifying further British expansion in southern Africa. The Zulu War saw disaster at Isandlwana, and heroic legend at Rorke's Drift. The performance of the Martini-Henry rifle (introduced in 1871) duly became a symbol of the Empire's colonial wars. There were many more campaigns in Africa before the end of the 19th Century, during a period of time known as the "scramble for Africa".
The Boer War began in 1899 after tension between the British and the two Dutch Boer republics culminated in the Boers declaring war against the British. Though it was a relatively minor war in comparison to what awaited the British in 1914, many tactics, technology and equipment used during the war helped the British gain experience for the forthcoming World War. However, future inadequacies had been discovered in the Army during the war, and like the Crimean War, most of the Army's deaths was due to disease. The war also saw the present and future Dominions -- Australia, Canada, Newfoundland, New Zealand and South Africa -- become increasingly independent and assertive, all having had troops fight the Boers. The British eventually withdrew from all of these countries and the Dominions forces took over its duties.
Under the Entente Cordiale, the British Army's role in a European war was to embark the 120,000 soldiers of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), arranged in six infantry and one cavalry divisions, to cooperate with the French Army. Kaiser Wilhelm was famously dismissive of the BEF, on 19 August issuing his order to "exterminate... the treacherous English and walk over General French's contemptible little army." — in later years the survivors of the regular army dubbed themselves "The Old Contemptibles". By the end of 1914, after the battles of Mons, Le Cateau, the Aisne and Ypres, the old regular British Army had been effectively wiped out.
As the regular Army declined, the numbers were made up, first by the Territorials, followed by the volunteers of Lord Kitchener's New Army, known as Kitchener's Army. By the end of August 1914, he had raised six new divisions, rising to 29 divisions by March 1915. The Territorial Force also expanded, raising second- and third-line battalions and forming eight additional divisions on top of its peacetime strength of 14 divisions. By January 1916 when conscription was introduced, 2.6 million men had volunteered for service and a further 2.3 million were conscripted before the end of the war.
A prominent feature of the early months of volunteering was the formation of Pals battalions, whole units recruited from the same town or workplace, such as the Grimsby Chums. Many of these pals who had lived and worked together, now joined up and trained together, only to die together on the first day on the Somme, leaving entire communities shattered.
During the war, most new infantry battalions were raised within existing regiments; the Northumberland Fusiliers were most prolific, fielding 51 battalions. However, some new regiments were created, such as the fifth regiment of the Foot Guards, the Welsh Guards, created in 1915 to honour the distinguished actions of the Welsh regiments in the war.
The war also saw the British having an increasing reliance upon the Dominion and Empire troops, many of whom volunteered to serve in the British Army out of a perception that Britain was the 'Motherland'. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment and British West Indies Regiment were both formed in 1915, the latter of which was made up of volunteers from the Caribbean who had arrived in Britain. Both regiments were disbanded in 1919. There were also existing regiments like the West India Regiment and West Africa Regiment (both disbanded by the end of the 1920s). At various times on the Western Front, Australia, Canada and India provided corps, New Zealand a division and South Africa a brigade, all of which were attached to British armies.
In August 1914, the Army's Royal Flying Corps dispatched 63 aircraft to France in support of the BEF. The aggressive doctrine of RFC commander, General Hugh Trenchard, and periods of technical inferiority such as the Fokker Scourge of 1916 and Bloody April in 1917 resulted in high casualty rates amongst aircrews. At the start of 1918, the RFC numbered nearly 4,000 aircraft, including capable fighters such as the Sopwith Camel and S.E.5a. On 1 April 1918, the RFC merged with the Royal Naval Air Service, forming the independent Royal Air Force.
The British Army were pioneers in some aspects of military technology, having adopted the first machine gun, the Maxim, in 1889 and by 1912 it possessed the Vickers machine gun. Both infantry and cavalry were equipped with the Lee-Enfield rifle (first introduced in 1895) with which the professionals of the regular Army could fire 15 aimed rounds per minute. However, in 1914 the Army was ill-prepared for large-scale continental warfare and ill-equipped for the environment of trench warfare, in particular short of grenades and mortars. Artillery suffered from a shortage of shells and initially supply only improved at the expense of quality. The Army adopted chemical weapons, usually in response to German innovations, and often lagged markedly, taking over a year to deploy their own mustard gas agent.
The British Army reacted to these shortcomings, introducing the Mills bomb as the standard grenade, producing over 70 million in the final three years of the war, and the versatile Stokes mortar, the predecessor the modern mortar. The role of the machine gun expanded throughout the war, dramatically increasing the firepower to the infantry. Platoons were equipped with the light Lewis gun while the independent machine gun companies of the Machine Gun Corps, established on 22 October 1915, operated the heavy Vickers. As the war progressed, the artillery grew in sophistication, employing the creeping barrage for protection of advancing infantry, developing sound-ranging and flash-detection techniques for counter-battery fire, and learning how to predict the fall of shells without needing to register the guns on their target.
The Army pioneered the use of the tank; operated by the Heavy Branch of the Machine Gun Corps, the Mark I tank first saw service on the Somme in September 1916. In July 1917, the Tank Corps was formed from the Heavy Branch and was the only corps created in the war to survive past the 1920s, becoming the Royal Tank Corps in 1922, then Royal Tank Regiment in 1939.
Trench warfare prevailed in 1915 and the BEF, as the junior partner on the Western Front, fought a series of small battles, at times coordinated with the larger French offensives; at Neuve Chapelle in March, Aubers Ridge and Festubert in May and at Givenchy in June. On 22 April 1915, the Germans launched the Second Battle of Ypres, employing poison gas for the first time on the Western Front and capturing much of the high ground that ringed the salient. By September 1915 the British Army had grown in strength, with the first New Army divisions entering the line, and as part of the Third Battle of Artois, the Army launched a major attack at Loos utilising their own newly developed chemical weapons for the first time. The result was another costly and disappointing failure and marked the end for Field Marshall French; on 19 December 1915, General Sir Douglas Haig became Commander-in-Chief of the BEF.
For the British Army, 1916 was dominated by the Battle of the Somme which started disastrously on 1 July. The first day on the Somme remains the bloodiest day in the history of the British Army when over 19,000 soldiers were killed and a nearly 40,000 were wounded, all for little or no gain. There followed nearly five months of attrition during which the Fourth Army of General Henry Rawlinson and the Fifth Army of General Hubert Gough advanced about five miles for a cost of 420,000 casualties. Despite the losses, the British Army under Haig had grown in size and experience such that it was now an equal partner with the French Army on the Western Front.
In February 1917 the German Army began to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line and it was these formidable defences that elements of the British Army assaulted in the Battle of Arras in April. For this battle, the British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, had placed Haig and the BEF under the orders of new French Commander-in-Chief, Robert Nivelle who planned a major French Army offensive in Champagne. Arras failed to deliver a breakthrough and Haig, freed from the restraints of the French command, now embarked on his favoured plan to launch an offensive in Flanders. In a successful preliminary operation, General Herbert Plumer's Second Army seized the Messines Ridge south of Ypres. The Third Battle of Ypres, which began on 31 July 1917, was one of the worst ordeals endured by British and Dominion forces during the war, with the battlefield reduced to a quagmire. It was not until 6 November that the Passchendaele ridge was captured, by which time the British Army had sustained 310,000 casualties.
For the British Army, 1917 ended with faint promise in the Battle of Cambrai which demonstrated the potential of tanks operating en masse. Third Army commander, General Julian Byng, planned an ambitious breakthrough and achieved an unprecedented advanced of six kilometres on the first day but lacked the reserves to either continue or consolidate. A German counter-offensive succeeded in recapturing most of the lost ground.
The year 1918 started with disaster and ended in triumph for the British Army. On 21 March 1918, German commander, General Erich Ludendorff, launched the Spring Offensive and the main weight of the first blow, Operation Michael, fell on the British Fifth Army of General Gough which was forced into retreat, finally halting the German advance east of Amiens. The next German attack came south of Ypres along the Lys river and here too the British Army fell back. Haig issued his famous Order of the Day, "With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause, each one of us must fight on to the end." In response to the crisis facing the Allies, French general Ferdinand Foch was made Supreme Commander for Allied forces on the Western Front, placing the BEF under his strategic direction.
On 8 August 1918, General Rawlinson's Fourth Army launched the Battle of Amiens which marked the start of the Hundred Days Offensive, the final Allied offensive on the Western Front. Over the following weeks, all five armies of the BEF went on the offensive from the Somme to Flanders. A few American divisions remained attached to British armies and participated in the British operations. Fighting continued right up until the Armistice with Germany came into effect at 11.00 am on 11 November 1918.
The British Army was heavily engaged in the Mediterranean, Middle East and Mesopotamia throughout the war, mainly against the Ottoman Empire. In April 1915, following the failure of the Royal Navy's attempt capture the Dardanelles, the Army landed at Cape Helles on the Gallipoli peninsula. In August another landing was made at Suvla Bay but the deadlock remained and by January 1916, the British, Anzac and French forces had withdrawn. A new front was opened in Salonika at the request of the Greek government, intending to support Serbian forces and oppose Bulgaria, but this too remained static, tying up troops who suffered severely from malaria and other illnesses; it gained a reputation as "Germany's biggest internment camp."
In the Sinai and Palestine, the British Army, along with Australian and New Zealand light cavalry, made steady progress against Ottoman opposition until the First Battle of Gaza in March 1917. The appointment of General Edmund Allenby reinvigorated the campaign, leading to the capture of Jerusalem in December 1917 and the decisive Meggido Offensive in September 1918 which precipitated an armistice with the Ottoman Empire. In Mesopotamia, the Army was highly dependent upon Indian Army forces and initially experienced success until defeat at Kut-al-Amara in April 1916 halted progress. The British eventually regained momentum upon General Frederick Stanley Maude becoming commander and Baghdad was captured in 1917.
One of the first post-war campaigns that the Army took part in was the Allied intervention in Russia in 1919 to assist the "White Army" against the Communist Bolsheviks during their Civil War. The British Army was also maintaining occupation forces in the defeated powers of WWI. In Germany, a British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) was established. The BAOR would remain in existence until 1929 when British forces were withdrawn. Another British occupation force was based in Constantinople in Turkey, and a number of British units fought against Turkish rebels during the Turkish War of Independence. A small British Military Mission was also advising the Polish Army during the Polish-Soviet War (1919-1921).
The Army, throughout the inter-war period, also had to deal with quelling paramilitary organisations seeking the removal of the British. In British Somaliland, Sayyid Mohammed Abdullah Hassan (known to the British Army as 'The Mad Mullah', although he was neither mad nor a mullah) resumed his campaign against the British, a campaign he had first begun in 1900. The operations against him were prominent due to the newly-formed RAF being instrumental in his defeat. The Army also took part in operations in Ireland against the IRA during the Anglo-Irish War. Both sides committed atrocities, some units becoming infamous, such as the paramilitary Black and Tans that were recruited from veterans of WWI. The British Army was also supporting British Indian Army operations in the North-West Frontier of India against numerous tribes (known collectively as the Pashtun) hostile to the British. The Army had been operating in the volatile North-West area since the 1800s. The last major uprising that the Army had to deal with before the start of the Second World War, was the uprising in Palestine that began in 1936.
By the 1930s, another war with Germany was about to occur, now controlled by Hitler's Nazi Party who wee becoming increasingly aggressive and expansionist. The Army was, however, not prepared for war, lagging behind the technologically advanced and much larger Heer of the German Wehrmacht. The mechanisation of the cavalry, converting to Cruiser, Light, and Infantry tanks, as-well as Carriers and Armoured cars, had begun in 1929 though was going at an extremely slow pace due to it having little priority brought on by the severe economical restrictions imposed on the Armed Forces. With each Service vying for a share of the defence budget, the Army came last behind the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force in allocation of funds. In contrast to Germany's embrace of tank warfare and individuals such as Heinz Guderian, many individuals in the higher echelons in Britain had little enthusiasm for armour and the ideas of Basil Liddell Hart and J.F.C. Fuller were largely ignored; ironically, many of their ideas were employed by the Germans for their Blitzkrieg. By the mid-1930s, mechanisation in the British Army was gaining momentum and on 4 April 1939, with the mechanisation process nearing completion, the Royal Armoured Corps was formed to administer the cavalry regiments and Royal Tank Regiment (with the exception of the Household Cavalry). The mechanisation process was finally completed in 1941 with the Royal Scots Greys.
After the Munich Crisis in 1938, a serious effort was undertaken to expand the Army, including the doubling in size of the Territorial Army, helped by the reintroduction of conscription in April 1939; by mid-1939 the Army consisted of just about 225,000 Regulars and 300,000 understrength and poorly-equipped Territorials and Reservists, all of which was dwarfed, yet again, by its continental counterparts. By the end of the year though, over 1 million had been conscripted into the Army while some occupations, such as dockers and miners, were exempt from being called up as part of reserved occupations. Just before the war, a new British Expeditionary Force was formed. Between 1938-39, with the a substantial expansion in the Army, a number of new organisations were formed, including the Auxiliary Territorial Service for women in September 1938; its duties were vast, and helped release men for front-line service.
By the time the British Empire, France and their allies declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939, two days after its invasion of Poland, the Army was still unprepared. For example, only a very small number of Matilda tanks (later to gain fame in North Africa) were in service when war broke out, and nearly 100,000 soldiers were based abroad, more than half of which were located in India and the East of Suez garrisons, such as Singapore. Others were based in the Mediterranean, Middle East, and North Africa, while the smallest was the West Indies with just a single battalion -- the 2nd Battalion, The King's Shropshire Light Infantry -- garrisoning the region, supported by indigenous units.
The British infantry at the beginning of the war were still equipped with the venerable Lee-Enfield rifle, the No. 4 variant being gradually phased in, and Webley revolver; they had gained a new reliable machine gun to accompany the Vickers, the Bren, and their principal anti-tank weapon was the Boys anti-tank rifle. They acquired many new technologies and equipment during the war, many of which were utilised to great effect by the new élite and special forces units, intended to strike against enemy-occupied territory. Among these élite forces, the most prominent were the Army Commandos, Long Range Desert Group, the Special Air Service Regiment (formed to administer existing SAS units in 1944) and The Parachute Regiment; the latter was administered by the Army Air Corps from 1942, along with The Glider Pilot Regiment and the Air Observation Post Squadron, RA, being joined by the SAS upon its formation. Some of the new infantry equipment produced in the war included the PIAT anti-gun launcher and Sten gun. A number of infantry battalions, such as the 2nd Ox & Bucks,1st Royal Ulsters and 2nd Battalion The South Staffordshire Regimentconverted to the "Airlanding" role, landing via glider. By the end of the war, much of the infantry itself had become mechanised, enabling it to better co-operate with armoured units.
The regular forces also experienced a substantial expansion, not just including the many battalions created in existing regiments. Six cavalry regiments were formed from the cadres of existing regiments, along with two new infantry regiments. All of these regiments would be disbanded during demobilisation in the aftermath of the war. The requirement for infantry was much less than in the previous world war, and many infantry battalions were duly converted into artillery in the Royal Artillery (such as anti-air, taking part in, among others, the Blitz) and armoured regiments in the Royal Armoured Corps and Royal Tank Regiment. For example, the 7th Battalion, The King's Regiment (Liverpool) became the 40th (The King's) Battalion, Royal Tank Regiment. A Reconnaissance Corps of over 20 regiments was also formed (absorbed by the RAC in 1944). By the end of the war, the tactics used for armoured regiments had become very sophisticated, including better combined operations with the other arms. The armoured regiments possessed an arsenal of capable tanks by the end of the war, including specialist vehicles known as "Hobart's Funnies", while some of the main combat tanks included the Sherman and Churchill. In the immediate aftermath of the war, the WWII-designed Centurion became the Army's first main battle tank.
As in WWI with the Bantam units created for people under regulation height, the Local Defence Volunteers was created for individuals too old or too young to be assigned to front-line units, or people in reserved occupations. The organisation was eventually re-titled to the Home Guard and was to be part of the defence of Britain in the advent of a German invasion of Britain. They were usually improvised and poorly equipped but were passionate and dedicated to their duties. They were popularised in the T.V. show "Dad's Army".
In the Mediterranean, the Army garrison in the British territory of Malta performed anti-air operations in conjunction with the RAF during the bombing of Malta (1940-42) by German and Italian forces. Malta went on to receive the collective award of the George Cross for its bravery. In Greece, the Army contributed a small force to a mostly Australian and New Zealand operation. After an Italian invasion of Greece in October 1940 was successfully repulsed, the Germans invaded in April 1941. A Commonwealth force came to Greece's assistance but they eventually had to be evacuated, many being moved to the island of Crete, commanded by General Bernard Freyberg. The Germans subsequently launched a combined air and sea invasion of Crete in May. The German paratroopers suffered severe casualties but they gradually gained the upper-hand and the Commonwealth defenders, having put up a stubborn defence, had to be evacuated. The Royal Navy suffered heavily in the process but in spite of the casualties they persisted in the evacuation. Over 16,000 were successfully evacuated but 12,254 Commonwealth soldiers were taken prisoner.
The Army was beginning to draw down its forces, beginning demobilisation shortly after the end of war. The Territorial units were placed in 'suspended animation', being reconstituted upon the reformation of the TA in 1947. On 1 January 1948, National Service, the new name for conscription, formally came into effect. The Army was, however, being reduced in size upon the end of British rule in India, including the second battalions of every Line Infantry regiment either amalgamating with the 1st Battalions to maintain the 2nd Battalion's history and traditions, or simply disband, thus ending the two-battalion policy implemented by Childers in 1881. This proved too severe a decision for the overstretched Army, and a number of regiments reformed their second battalion in the 1950s. The year 1948 also saw the Army receive four Gurkha regiments (eight battalions in total) transferred to them from the Indian Army and were formed into the Brigade of Gurkhas, initially based in Malaya.
Many of the regiments created during the 1957 White Paper would have only a brief existence, most being amalgamated into new 'large' regiments -- The Queen's, Royal Fusiliers, Royal Anglian, Light Infantry, Royal Irish Rangers, and the Royal Green Jackets -- all of whose 'junior' battalions were disbanded by the mid-1970s. Two regiments -- The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) and The York and Lancaster Regiment-- opted to be disbanded rather than amalgamated. The fourteen administrative brigades (created in 1948) were replaced by six administrative divisions in 1968, with regimental cap badges being re-introduced the following year. The Conservative Government came to power in 1970, one of its pledges included the saving of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders after a popular campaign to save it had been provoked by the announcement of its intended demise. The Government also decided to stop the planned amalgamation of The Gloucestershire Regiment with The Royal Hampshire Regiment. Further cavalry and infantry regiments were, however, amalgamated between 1969-1971, with six cavalry (into three) and six infantry (also into three) regiments doing so.
For the structure of the Army during this time period, see List of British Army regiments (1962).
The latter part of the 1940s saw the British begin to withdraw from Empire, the Army playing a prominent role in its dismantlement. The first colony the British withdraw from was its largest possession, India. It was announced in 1947 that India would become independent on 15 August, being separated into two counties, one mostly Muslim (Pakistan) and the other mostly Hindu (India). The last British Army unit to leave was the 1st Battalion, The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's) on 28 February 1948. In Palestine there was a surge in attacks against the British by Zionist organisations such as Irgun and the Stern Gang after the British attempted to limit Jewish immigration into Palestine. The British eventually withdrew in 1948, with the State of Israel being established on 14 May. Elsewhere, Communist guerrillas launched an uprising in Malaya, starting the Malayan Emergency.
In the early 1950s, trouble began in Cyprus and Kenya (the Mau Mau uprising), in the former, an organisation known as EOKA sought unity with Greece, the situation being stabilised just before Cyprus was given independence in 1960. Kenya was one of many deployments for the Army in Africa during that period, most of the others being former Italian colonies placed in the temporary control of the Army. The Army also took part in the Korean War (1950-53), fighting in battles such as Imjin River which included Gloster Hill. Elsewhere, the Army withdrew from the Suez Canal Zone, Egypt in 1955. The following year, along with France and Israel, the British invaded Egypt in a conflict known as the Suez War, after the Egyptian leader, President Nasser nationalised the Suez Canal which Britain and France had shares in. The British Army contributed forces to the amphibious assault on Suez and Paras' took part in the airborne assault. Militarily, the war was a success, but international pressure forced them to withdraw soon afterwards, replaced by a UN peacekeeping force.
In the 1960s, Aden and Borneo featured heavily with the Army, the latter known as the Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation.
In 1969 a surge in violence in Northern Ireland against Catholics by Protestants led to British troops having to be sent into NI to assist in stopping the violence. They were initially welcomed by the Catholic community; however, this developed into opposition, and the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA), a militant break-away from the IRA which had been quiet since the 1962 cessation of the Border Campaign, began to target British troops. The first British soldier to die in the conflict was Gunner Robert Curtis, who was killed in February 1971. The Army's operations in the early phase of its deployment had the Army placed in a policing role, for which, in many cases, it was ill suited. This involved seeking to prevent confrontations between the Catholics and Protestants, as well as putting down riots and stopping Republican and Loyalist paramilitary groups from committing terrorist attacks. However, as the Provisional IRA campaign 1969-1997 grew in ferocity in the early 1970s, the Army was increasingly caught in a situation where its actions were directed against the IRA and the Catholic Irish nationalist community which harboured it. Some prominent incidents involving British troops included the Lower Falls Curfew of 1971, when over 3000 troops imposed a 3 day curfew on the Falls Road area of Belfast and fought a sustained gun battle with local IRA men, Operation Motorman in 1972, when about 21,000 troops were used to restore control over areas of Belfast and Derry and Bloody Sunday on 30 January 1972 in which 13 civilians were killed by The Parachute Regiment. The biggest single loss of life for British troops in the conflict came at Narrow Water, where eighteen British soldiers were killed in an PIRA bomb attack on 27 August 1979, on the same day Lord Mountbatten of Burma was assassinated by the PIRA in a separate attack. In all almost 500 British troops died in service in Northern Ireland, the last of whom were killed in 1997. Most of these deaths however occurred in the early 1970s, when British troops were placed at the forefront of the conflict and had little experiance in dealing with a low intensity conflict in a predominantly urban, heavily populated area. By the late 1970s, the Army was replaced to some degree as "frontline" security service, in preference for the local Royal Ulster Constabulary and the Ulster Defence Regiment (raised 1970) as part of the Ulsterisation policy. By the 1980s and early 1990s, Army casualties in the conflict had dropped. Moreover, British Special Forces had some successes against the PIRA - see Operation Flavius and the Loughall ambush. Nevertheless, the conflict tied up over 12,000 British troops on a continuos basis until the late 1990s and was ended not with the defeat of the PIRA, but with their incorporation into the political process.
In 1980, the Special Air Service emerged from its secretive world when its most high-profile operation, the ending of the Iranian Embassy siege in London, was broadcast live on television. By the 1980s, even though the Army was being increasingly deployed abroad, most of its permanent overseas garrison were gone, with the largest remaining being the BAOR in Germany, while others included Belize, Brunei, Gibraltar, and Hong Kong. One garrison, not garrisoned by the Army, was the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, 6,000 to 8,000 miles (11,000 to 15,000 km) from Britain. The Argentinians invaded the Falklands in April 1982. The British quickly responded and the Army had an active involvement in the campaign to liberate the Falklands upon the landings at San Carlos, taking part in a series of battles that led to them reaching the outskirts of the capital, Stanley. The Falklands War ending with the formal surrender of the Argentinian forces on 14 June.
The Labour Party became the country's new government after their election victory in 1997 and a new defence white paper was prepared, known as the Strategic Defence Review (1998). Some of the Army's reforms included the creation of two deployable divisions -- 1st (UK) Armoured Division and 3rd Mechanised Division, with the 1st Division being based in Germany -- and three 'regenerative' divisions -- 2nd, 4th, and 5th Divisions. The 16 Air Assault Brigade was formed from 24 Airmobile Brigade and elements of 5 Airborne Brigade to provide the Army with increased mobilty, and would include the Westland WAH-64 Apache attack helicopter. Other attempts to make the Army more mobile was the creation of the Joint Rapid Reaction Force, intended to provide a corps-sized force capable of reacting quickly to situations similar to Bosnia. The Army Air Corps's helicopters also helped form the multi-service Joint Helicopter Command.
For the structure of the British Army during this period, see List of British Army regiments (1994)
Another defence review was published in 2004, known as Delivering Security in a Changing World. The defence white paper stated that the Army's manpower would be reduced by 1,000, with four infantry battalions being cut and the manpower being redistributed elsewhere. One of the most radical aspects of the reforms was the announcement that most single-battalion regiments would amalgamate into large regiments, with most of the battalions retaining their previous regimental titles in their battalion names. The TA would also be further integrated into the Army, with battalions being numbered into the regiment's structure. These are reminiscent, in some respects, to the Cardwell-Childers reforms and the 1960s reforms.
Since the late 1990s, the British Army has been gradually moulded into an increasingly expeditionary-based force in anticipation of further small-scale wars against terrorist organisations like Al Qaida and so-called "Rogue states". The élite units of the Army are also playing an increasingly prominent role in the Army's operations and the SAS was allocated further funds in the 2004 defence paper, conveying the SAS's increasing important in the War on Terror. The 1st Battalion of the Parachute Regiment, meanwhile, is to become part of a new tri-service unit to support the SAS and the Navy's SBS, being acclaimed as the Army's equivalent to the U.S. Army Rangers. Another élite unit, which became operational on 6 April 2005, is the Special Reconnaissance Regiment.
The British Army has also played an increasingly prominent role in peacekeeping operation, gaining much respect for its comparative expertise in the area. In 1992, during the wars in the Balkans provoked by the gradual disintegration of Yugoslavia, UN forces intervened in Croatia and later Bosnia, British forces contributing as part of UNPROFOR (United Nations Protection Force) (UNPROFOR). The force was a peacekeeping one, but with no peace to keep, it proved ineffective and was replaced by the NATO IFOR though this was replaced the following year by SFOR. As of 2005, Britain's contribution numbers about 3,000 troops. In 1999 the UK took a lead role in the NATO war against Slobodan Milošević's forces in Kosovo. After the air war ended, the Parachute Regiment and Royal Gurkha Rifles provided the spearhead for ground forces entering Kosovo. Mike Jackson refused, preventing In 2000, British forces, as part of Operation Palliser, intervened in civil war ravaged Sierra Leone, with the intention of evacuating British, Commonwealth and EU citizens. The SAS also played a prominent role when they along with Paras, launched the successful Operation Barras to rescue 6 soldiers of the Royal Irish Regiment being held by the rebels. The British force remained and provided the catalyst for the stabilisation of the country.
The early 21st Century saw the world descend into a new war after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York by Al Qaida: the War on Terrorism. A US-led invasion of Taliban-ruled Afghanistan followed, with the British contribution led by the RN and RAF; the most important Army element being the SAS. The British later took part in the invasion of invasion of Iraq in 2003, Britain's contribution being known as Operation Telic, The Army played a more significant role in Iraq than Afghanistan, deploying a substantial force, centred around 1 (UK) Armoured Division with, again, around 28,000 troops. The war began in March and the British fought in the southern area of Iraq, eventually capturing the second largest city, Basra, in April. The Army remained in Iraq upon the end of the war and now leads the Multi-National Division (South East), with the Army presence in Iraq numbering about 8 to 9,000 soldiers.
The British army has mixed extreme conservatism, 'penny-pinching', and extraordinarily exacting standards in its rifles. For example the move to percussion-caps was not made until 1842, while an 1866 trial examined 104 weapons and declined to award a first prize, or that the specifications for a SLR in the 1930s were so stiff "it is doubtful if any... rifle of the present day could meet it in its entirety."
Changes were usually forced on the Army as a result of conflict or the actions of other armies. Note the rapid pace of change in the period 1850-1895 as the Crimean War forced changes and then the foreign demonstrations of the needle-gun, the Chassepot, and the Mannlicher-Mauser designs frightened the Army.
In the 19th century the change-overs were not instant, many colonial units soldiered on with older weapons - some units missing two cycles of change - while some weapons (italicized in the list below) were only issued to specialist rifle brigades or in very limited numbers.
As is often the case, the Army's men often had the weapons to fight the last war by the time of the following conflict. Most of the 19th century weapons were technologically obsolete at their introduction or within five years, and despite the apparently exhaustive testing many inadequate weapons were issued.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"History of the British Army".
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